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Noe Ponti Follows-up New National Record With Golden 50.37 100 Fly

2024 SWISS CHAMPIONSHIPS

All eyes were on 22-year-old Noe Ponti to see what the Olympic medalist would produce in tonight’s final of the men’s 100m butterfly at the 2024 Swiss Championships.

Ponti already ripped a huge national record of 50.16 in the heats, destroying the 50.74 benchmark he put on the books at the 2020 Olympic Games. That inserted him onto the list of all-time performers as the 6th-best.

While again under the former record, Ponti added slightly but still nailed a head-turning time of 50.37 to get it done for gold this evening.

The next-closest swimmer was Bulgaria’s Josif Miladinov who snagged silver in 52.89 while Ilan Gagnebin of the host nation touched in 54.89 for bronze.

Comparing his splits from today’s two efforts, Ponti brought the heat on the first half, cutting .18 from his morning’s opening split of 23.82. He suffered on the latter 50m, however, which rendered the time .21 slower overall.

Splits Comparison:

FORMER SWISS RECORD
NEW SWISS RECORD
Tonight’s Final
Tokyo 2020 Olympics
2024 Swiss Championships
2024 Swiss Championships
50m 23.67 23.82 23.64
100m 27.07 26.34 26.73
Total Time 50.74 50.16 50.37

Additional Notes

  • Antonio Djakovic topped the men’s 800m free podium, clocking 8:07.40 to win the event by 8 seconds. He owns the Swiss national record with his lifetime best of 7:58.01 from January’s Geneva Challenge.
  • World Championships medalist Roman Mityukov fired off an eye-catching performance in the men’s 200m back. The 23-year-old crushed a mark of 1:55.60, a result which fell just 1:55.34 nailed at the 2023 World Championships. His outing represented the 3rd-quickest time of his career.
  • Jeremy Desplanches continues to find difficulty getting back to the form that brought him Olympic bronze in the men’s 200m IM in Tokyo. Tonight he hit just 2:00.00 in the event, well off his national record of 1:56.17 from 2021. His fastest of the season is the 1:58.17 notched in the heats in Doha. He ultimately finished 9th in 1:59.08, shut out of the final.

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Susan
7 months ago

His finish was a short stroke ..still, 2 stellar times

Philip Johnson
7 months ago

Hmm, everyone was predicting 49, what happened?

Stewart Fenwick
Reply to  Philip Johnson
7 months ago

Reality happened.

Jonathan
7 months ago

Everyone on this site always assumes when someone swims really fast in prelims or in season that they’ll go even faster in finals or later in the season, but a lot of the time it doesn’t happen. Something to keep in mind.

Stewart Fenwick
Reply to  Jonathan
7 months ago

Exactly this.

Jeah
Reply to  Jonathan
7 months ago

They are optimistic

Daddy Foster
Reply to  Jonathan
7 months ago

Agreed 100%.

I think in this case, people were optimistic in part because he dropped a bunch from semis to finals in his 50 (me included)

Beginner Swimmer at 25
Reply to  Jonathan
7 months ago

Training how to swim a prelim, a semi faster, and peak at finals is an art

Stewart Fenwick
Reply to  Beginner Swimmer at 25
7 months ago

Michael Phelps got it down to an art.

Kaylee McKeown, Siobhan Haughey and MOC are also very good in that area.

Jonathan
Reply to  Stewart Fenwick
7 months ago

Kate Douglass has also been pretty good about saving her best performances for the final.

Jonathan
Reply to  Beginner Swimmer at 25
7 months ago

Will Cameron McEvoy learn how to do that?

Stewart Fenwick
Reply to  Jonathan
7 months ago

You didn’t watch him in Fukuoka?

Jeah
7 months ago

Should have stayed at NC State

Shawty
Reply to  Jeah
7 months ago

Why?

Stewart Fenwick
7 months ago

100 fly final in Paris will be crazy exciting.

All 8 finalists are capable of doing 50.3 and faster

Last edited 7 months ago by Stewart Fenwick
Joel
7 months ago

I don’t think Desplanches won gold in the 200 IM in Tokyo? – in the last section.

Stewart Fenwick
Reply to  Joel
7 months ago

He won bronze.

Wang Shun gold and Duncan Scott silver

Retta Race
Reply to  Stewart Fenwick
7 months ago

Fixed!

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Braden Keith

Braden Keith is the Editor-in-Chief and a co-founder/co-owner of SwimSwam.com. He first got his feet wet by building The Swimmers' Circle beginning in January 2010, and now comes to SwimSwam to use that experience and help build a new leader in the sport of swimming. Aside from his life on the InterWet, …

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